Great Migration
The racial composition of the nation's cities underwent a decisive change during and after World War I. In 1910, three out of every four black Americans lived on farms, and nine out of ten lived in the South. World War I changed that profile as 1.5 million Southern blacks moved to Northern cities.
Reasons for the migration
Conditions worsened greatly for African Americans in the South following the end of Reconstruction in 1877. The Ku Klux Klan emerged when Federal troops left the South. In efforts to try to maintain their social lifestyle, the Klan used fear tactics against African Americans. Jim Crow laws, in the South, stripped African Americans of the freedoms they hoped for following the Civil War. By removing their right to vote, one of the most important rights was taken away from African-Americans. Without representation in government, African Americans in the South did not have a voice working for their interests.
After the 13th amendment ended slavery, many freed African Americans still were subjected to slave like conditions working as sharecroppers under white land owners. In the early 1900s, floods and an infestation of boll weevils (beetles) destroyed millions of acres of cotton. Southern states of Alabama, Georgia and Mississippi were hit the hardest and as a result, these states had the greatest number of African Americans who chose to move to the North. In addition, the average wage in the South was $376
compared to $1,086 in other regions of the country. African Americans also had to work terribly long hours in the South- many worked seventy-five hours a week and were looking for change.
Employers in the North eagerly sought African-American labor from the South to assist with the growing economy as our nation was industrializing. They were willing to pay wages much greater than African Americans earned in the South working on farms. In fact, African Americans could earn $6-$8 per day in the Northern cities, doing what would take them a week to earn in the South. The African Americans who migrated from the South to the North typically found jobs as construction workers, teamsters, and janitors. As African Americans moved north, cities like Detroit, New York, Chicago, and Philadelphia grew tremendously.
Manufacturing increased dramatically in the Northern factories during World War I in order to produce munitions for the war effort. Factories often doubled or tripled their labor force. After the war ended, the US would provide European nations with goods as they were rebuilding, so demand was high for US made goods. Many African-American workers were willing to do jobs that white workers were sometimes unwilling to do. This occurred because of the nature of the work and the low wages. Although African Americans received some of the lowest wages possible at the time in northern factories, they often viewed it as an advance compared to their former lifestyle in the South.
HarlemRenaissance
It was time for a cultural celebration. Many African Americans discovered they had shared common experiences in their past histories and their uncertain present circumstances as they migrated North and settled in cities. Instead of wallowing in self-pity, the recently dispossessed ignited an explosion of cultural pride. Indeed, African American culture was reborn in the Harlem Renaissance.
The movement for black pride found its cultural expression in the Harlem Renaissance--the first self-conscious literary and artistic movement in African American history. The Harlem Renaissance promoted African American literature, arts, music, and history. A growing spirit of racial pride was evident. A group of talented writers, artists, dancers and musicians like Duke Ellington, Paul Robeson, Zora Neale Hurston, Claude McKay expressed pride in their culture and heritage despite Jim Crow laws. They created works like Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God, performed at the Apollo theatre, and played songs like Louis Armstrong’s What a Wonderful World. No aspect of the Harlem Renaissance shaped America and the entire world as much as jazz.
Jazz
In the decade following World War I, an artistic explosion occurred within the African American community that produced a wealth of music, literature poetry, dance, social discourse and visual art.
New Orleans played a great role in the evolution of jazz music in the 20th century. At this time, the people of New Orleans hailed from many different cultures. As new settlers arrived in New Orleans, musical traditions from all over the world began to unite. African American musicians merged European musical tradition with such music as blues, ragtime, and marching band to create a new style of music—jazz.
As African Americans began migrating to northern cities like Chicago and New York in search of better opportunity, they brought with them the sounds of blues and jazz. Harlem Renaissance artists expressed their emotions through the jazz instruments like the trumpet, saxophone, trombone, piano and drums, as popular dances like the Charleston, Bees Knees, and Pedal Pusher were all the rage of flappers in the speakeasies and night clubs of the 1920s and 1930s. Jazz grew in popularity with the invention of the radio allowing the sound to be exposed to more Americans.
Works Cited:
Marks, C. (1989). Farewell-We’re good and gone. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press.
Scheuerell, S. The Great Migration:Using a Problem-Based Learning Approach and the Internet. Dubuque, IA.
Great Migration
The racial composition of the nation's cities underwent a decisive change during and after World War I. In 1910, three out of every four black Americans lived on farms, and nine out of ten lived in the South. World War I changed that profile as 1.5 million Southern blacks moved to Northern cities.
Reasons for the migration
Conditions worsened greatly for African Americans in the South following the end of Reconstruction in 1877. The Ku Klux Klan emerged when Federal troops left the South. In efforts to try to maintain their social lifestyle, the Klan used fear tactics against African Americans. Jim Crow laws, in the South, stripped African Americans of the freedoms they hoped for following the Civil War. By removing their right to vote, one of the most important rights was taken away from African-Americans. Without representation in government, African Americans in the South did not have a voice working for their interests.
After the 13th amendment ended slavery, many freed African Americans still were subjected to slave like conditions working as sharecroppers under white land owners. In the early 1900s, floods and an infestation of boll weevils (beetles) destroyed millions of acres of cotton. Southern states of Alabama, Georgia and Mississippi were hit the hardest and as a result, these states had the greatest number of African Americans who chose to move to the North. In addition, the average wage in the South was $376
compared to $1,086 in other regions of the country. African Americans also had to work terribly long hours in the South- many worked seventy-five hours a week and were looking for change.
Employers in the North eagerly sought African-American labor from the South to assist with the growing economy as our nation was industrializing. They were willing to pay wages much greater than African Americans earned in the South working on farms. In fact, African Americans could earn $6-$8 per day in the Northern cities, doing what would take them a week to earn in the South. The African Americans who migrated from the South to the North typically found jobs as construction workers, teamsters, and janitors. As African Americans moved north, cities like Detroit, New York, Chicago, and Philadelphia grew tremendously.
Manufacturing increased dramatically in the Northern factories during World War I in order to produce munitions for the war effort. Factories often doubled or tripled their labor force. After the war ended, the US would provide European nations with goods as they were rebuilding, so demand was high for US made goods. Many African-American workers were willing to do jobs that white workers were sometimes unwilling to do. This occurred because of the nature of the work and the low wages. Although African Americans received some of the lowest wages possible at the time in northern factories, they often viewed it as an advance compared to their former lifestyle in the South.
Harlem Renaissance
It was time for a cultural celebration. Many African Americans discovered they had shared common experiences in their past histories and their uncertain present circumstances as they migrated North and settled in cities. Instead of wallowing in self-pity, the recently dispossessed ignited an explosion of cultural pride. Indeed, African American culture was reborn in the Harlem Renaissance.
The movement for black pride found its cultural expression in the Harlem Renaissance--the first self-conscious literary and artistic movement in African American history. The Harlem Renaissance promoted African American literature, arts, music, and history. A growing spirit of racial pride was evident. A group of talented writers, artists, dancers and musicians like Duke Ellington, Paul Robeson, Zora Neale Hurston, Claude McKay expressed pride in their culture and heritage despite Jim Crow laws. They created works like Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God, performed at the Apollo theatre, and played songs like Louis Armstrong’s What a Wonderful World. No aspect of the Harlem Renaissance shaped America and the entire world as much as jazz.
Jazz
In the decade following World War I, an artistic explosion occurred within the African American community that produced a wealth of music, literature poetry, dance, social discourse and visual art.
New Orleans played a great role in the evolution of jazz music in the 20th century. At this time, the people of New Orleans hailed from many different cultures. As new settlers arrived in New Orleans, musical traditions from all over the world began to unite. African American musicians merged European musical tradition with such music as blues, ragtime, and marching band to create a new style of music—jazz.As African Americans began migrating to northern cities like Chicago and New York in search of better opportunity, they brought with them the sounds of blues and jazz. Harlem Renaissance artists expressed their emotions through the jazz instruments like the trumpet, saxophone, trombone, piano and drums, as popular dances like the Charleston, Bees Knees, and Pedal Pusher were all the rage of flappers in the speakeasies and night clubs of the 1920s and 1930s. Jazz grew in popularity with the invention of the radio allowing the sound to be exposed to more Americans.
Works Cited:
Marks, C. (1989). Farewell-We’re good and gone. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press.
Scheuerell, S. The Great Migration:Using a Problem-Based Learning Approach and the Internet. Dubuque, IA.
http://www.historyjazz.com/jazzhistory.html